A comfortable residential locality on the north
side of Enfield, taking its name from an Old English word meaning a patch of higher ground in a marsh. John Tiptoft, Earl
of Worcester, is said to have built Elsing (or Elsynge) Hall here in the 1460s. Sir Thomas Lovell, Speaker of the House of
Commons and Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1485, lived here from 1492 and hosted frequent royal visits. It is said that
Sir Walter Raleigh laid his cloak across a puddle at Elsing so that Elizabeth I might cross without getting her feet wet,
but other localities also lay claim to this legend. The house was demolished around 1660 and its site was lost until excavations
300 years later. Forty Hall was built to the south-west of Elsing for Sir Nicholas Raynton in 1636 and heavily modified around
1708. Raynton was a haberdasher and Lord Mayor of London in 1632. Other wealthy gentlemen built villas nearby in the 18th
and early 19th centuries and several have survived, as have a few older cottages. The Bridgen Hall estate, which lay between
Carterhatch Lane and Goat Lane, was sold for building in 1868. Streets were laid out but parts were later used for gravel
digging and it was many decades before the estate was completed. The introduction of better bus services after World War I
and the construction of the Great Cambridge Road (A10) in 1924 stimulated housebuilding on the eastern side of the locality.
The built-up part of Forty Hill had mostly assumed its present form by 1939 and further development was prohibited by green-belt
legislation after the war was over. Enfield council acquired the Forty Hall estate in 1951. The hall is grade I-listed and
has served as the borough’s arts and heritage museum since 1955 but this will move to Enfield Town at some point in
the uncertain future.